cover image Dear Marcus: A Letter to the Man Who Shot Me

Dear Marcus: A Letter to the Man Who Shot Me

Jerry McGill. Spiegel & Grau, $22 (184p) ISBN 978-0-8129-9307-3

A moment of senseless violence transforms a young man in this inspiring memoir of disability. In 1982, McGill was 13 years old and living in a Manhattan housing project when he was randomly shot in the back by an assailant who was never found (he dubs the unknown gunman “Marcus”). The wound left him a near quadriplegic, and the once athletic boy faced an agonizing struggle to recover some bodily function, and adjust to losing most. McGill takes an unsparing though humorously insightful look at the frustrations and humiliations imposed by his handicap and at the permanent rifts his family suffered from the strain. In time, McGill learns to appreciate his care-givers, finishes college, embarks on a rewarding career, and experiences a tender sexual encounter with a former camp counselor. “Happiness is a thing I can control if I put my mind to it,” he realizes. McGill moves from bitter contempt for his attacker to a deeper analysis of the ghetto culture of violence, fatherlessness, and misguided machismo that victimized him—and eventually to understanding and forgiveness. Agent, Lydia Willis. Photos. (May 1)